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Veterinary vs. Human grade Ketamine? (for depression)

Rosarywater

Greenlighter
Joined
Aug 19, 2013
Messages
2
I'm interested in ketamine for relieving severe depression and am wondering if there is any significant difference between the veterinary and medical grades. Dr. Fruitman, a NYC doctor who is doing this therapy, says on his website that the negative effects of K are because a) recreational users take very high doses and b) they use veterinary grade.

If one dosed it right, would it still be dangerous to use vet grade K for depression?

***btw I am asking here because I'd rather not pay several hundred dollars to hear it from the doctor.
 
Veterinarians use medical grade Ketamine. Not sure what you even mean by "human grade" K. If its in a pharmaceutical vial, then Ketamine is Ketamine.
 
There's no difference between ketamine for human use and ketamine for veterinary use. Same formulation.

Some doctors use S-ketamine for humans primarily because they think it reduces the indidence of side effects. But they use racemic K sometimes too.
 
Interesting. In most respects S+ ket is noticeably more potent, but to my knowledge, no study has looked at the different effects of either isomer vs the racemate. Would love to study this myself, as I have a suspicion the R isomer may be equipotent for antidepressant purposes.
 
Ketamine is Ketamine.


I don't actually think that's true the way it is with something like MDMA... with the different isomers there can be quite a bit of variance, and I know that different manufacturers use different preservatives so that may play some part.


but yeah, racemic ketamine HCl and benzethonium chloride is racemic ketamine HCl and benzethonium chloride...... lol
 
The amount of benzethonium chloride (maybe 0.5%... more like 500 ppm) in a typical dose of K is non active in humans. That, and as a charged quat ammonium compound it's going to have a hard time making it through the BBB.
 
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